Waks v. State
This text of 375 P.2d 136 (Waks v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment against the appellants, petitioners below, on their claim for the return of property escheated to the state. One Arthur Silverman died intestate at Sitka, Alaska, in 1946, leaving an estate of the appraised value of $51,819.-79. Two years later the residue of the estate escheated to the Territory (now State) of Alaska by order of the probate court. On June 3, 1955, the appellants filed a petition in the lower court in which they claimed to be the heirs of the Arthur Sil-verman above named and asked that they be awarded the escheated property.
As we view the record before us and read the briefs of the parties there appear to be two questions presented on this appeal: (1) Did the court apply the correct standard or degree of proof for establishing heirship ? (2) Were the court’s findings of fact clearly erroneous?
The case was tried and argued to the court sitting without a jury and some six months later the trial judge gave an oral memorandum of decision from the bench. In that memorandum he stated that he would apply the rule announced in the Alaska case of In re Miller’s Estate 1 that *137 the proof of heirship in a suit to recover escheated property must be clear and conclusive both as to the identity of the deceased and his relationship to the petitioners. “Otherwise,” he stated, “the opportunity would exist for either intentional or unintentional fraud in such claims against the State of Alaska * *
The trial judge then continued:
“ * * * I cannot, find from the evidence before the court, from the affidavits and all the evidence, that there is clear and conclusive proof that the identity of the deceased Arthur Silverman is a relative of those persons claiming here to be his heirs. The relationship of the petitioners to an Arthur Silverman is not questioned. The question being: Is this Arthur Silver-man the one which was the uncle of the individuals which here claim the estate which was escheated to the State of Alaska? I cannot find that the evidence is conclusive within the rules stated by the Miller case. The name ‘Silverman’ is a very common name. The information which has come before the court is indirect, and I can find no single conclusive piece of evidence that would tie the relationship of Arthur Silverman decedent with whom we are involved, with these individuals. There is no question, perhaps, that they had a relative named Arthur Silverman, but to tie that Arthur Silverman with the present Arthur Silverman is where the proof specifically fails, and I have searched the file of the case and my notes of the proof for some single one incident which would tie this individual specifically and conclusively to the plaintiffs, and I am unable to find such proof. For this reason, the claim of the petitioners or claimants must be denied, and Mr. Holmes, you may prepare an order stating such. * * * ”
These pronouncements of the trial court elicit our first question: Did the court apply the correct standard or degree of proof for establishing heirship in an escheat case? We are of the opinion that it did not.
The appellants contend that the “deaf and conclusive” proof required by the trial court was of too high a degree and maintain that it was sufficient that they prove their claim by a preponderance of the evidence. They point out that section 57-8-7, ACLA1949 requires that the issues in proceedings to vacate escheats must be tried by the court as issues are tried in civil actions and that section S8-S-1, ACLA1949, relating to the instructions to be given by the court to the jury on all proper occasions, provides in the Fifth subdivision thereof as follows:
“That in civil cases the affirmative of the issue shall be proved, and when the evidence is contradictory the finding shall be according to the preponderance of the evidence.”
Without deciding at this time whether the rule of preponderance in civil actions tried by jury applies with equal force in civil cases tried by the court sitting without a jury, 2 we are of the opinion that public policy dictates that a higher degree of proof than a preponderance of the evidence should be required of one seeking to establish a claim to money or other property of a decedent which has escheated to the state. Such claims are usually well on the way to becoming stale because of the long time interval allowed between the adjudication of escheat and the commencement of the action to estabish the claim. 3 Generally, undependable and uncontradictable hearsay testimony *138 must be relied upon because living witnesses who could testify from their own knowledge as to the relationship of the claimant to the decedent are no longer available.
Considerations such as the foregoing, no doubt, led the trial court in this case to comment that “the proof must be conclusive and the relationship between the deceased and those claiming to be his heirs must be clearly established” or “the opportunity would exist for either intentional or unintentional fraud in such claims against the State of Alaska.”
The only case we have been able to find, involving the proof of relationship between a decedent and claimants to his property in a probate proceeding or in an action to recover property left by the decedent and escheated to the state in which the standard of persuasion was declared to be “clear and conclusive” proof is the Alaska case of In re Miller’s Estate above mentioned. In that case, decided before statehood, Judge Alexander speaking for the District Court of the Territory of Alaska and without citing any authority, concluded;
“In such cases as this, I think the proof should be clear and conclusive, both as to the identity of the deceased and his relationship to the petitioners, which certainly does not exist here.” 4
We disagree with the standard of proof required in the Miller case and hold instead that persons seeking the return of property escheated to the state as unclaimed have the burden of proving their relationship to the decedent by clear and convincing evidence. 5 In other words, the claimants must induce belief in the mind of the judge or jury that the facts which they assert are not merely probably true, but that they are highly probable ; 6 yet the claimants are not required to discharge the greater burden of persuasion that the facts asserted are almost certainly true, true beyond a reasonable doubt, or conclusive. 7
*139 Because of the trial court’s failure to apply the correct standard of proof, the judgment (designated “Order” in the record) is reversed and the case remanded with directions to proceed in a manner not inconsistent herewith; and, since the case must be reversed, it is suggested that the trial court make and file written findings and conclusions herein in conformity with Civ.R. 52(a). 8
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
375 P.2d 136, 1962 Alas. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waks-v-state-alaska-1962.